Imagine covering Fox News for a living

For some of us, keeping an eye on Fox News’ partisan and unprofessional antics is a habit of morbid curiosity. For the great folks at Media Matters, monitoring Fox News is part of an ambitious drive to bring some accountability to modern journalism. But imagine being a media reporter for a legitimate news outlet, and trying to cover Fox News objectively. That has to difficult.

The NYT’s David Carr is a media columnist, and has to cover the Republican network as part of his duties. He explained today what that’s like to even consider writing about Fox News in a fascinating item.

Once the public relations apparatus at Fox News is engaged, there will be the calls to my editors, keening (and sometimes threatening) e-mail messages, and my requests for interviews will quickly turn into depositions about my intent or who else I am talking to.

And if all that stuff doesn’t slow me down and I actually end up writing something, there might be a large hangover: Phone calls full of rebuke for a dependent clause in the third to the last paragraph, a ritual spanking in the blogs with anonymous quotes that sound very familiar, and — if I really hit the jackpot — the specter of my ungainly headshot appearing on one of Fox News’s shows along with some stern copy about what an idiot I am. […]

Media reporting about other media’s approach to producing media is pretty confusing business to begin with. Feelings, which are always raw for people who make their mistakes in public, will be bruised. But that does not fully explain the scorched earth between Fox News and those who cover it.

To hear Carr tell it, Fox News operates under a well-coordinated, omerta-like code, where “media relations is a kind of rolling opposition research operation intended to keep reporters in line by feeding and sometimes maiming them.” (Carr noted, “Earlier this year, a colleague of mine said, he was writing a story about CNN’s gains in the ratings and was told on deadline by a Fox News public relations executive that if he persisted, ‘they’ would go after him. Within a day, ‘they’ did, smearing him around the blogs, he said.”)

We’re talking about what is ostensibly a news network, not an organized crime family.

The point of Carr’s piece, however, wasn’t necessarily about Fox News’ heavy-handed operations, but rather, to raise an interesting observation about the consequences of its defensiveness.

Fox News’s amazing coup d’etat in the cable news war has very likely been undercovered because the organization is such a handful to deal with. Fox is so busy playing defense — mentioning it in the same story as CNN can be a high crime — that its business and journalism accomplishments don’t get traction and the cable station never seems to attain the legitimacy it so clearly craves.

There have been few stories about Bill O’Reilly’s softer side (I’m sure he has one), and while Shepard Smith’s amazing reporting in New Orleans got some play, he was not cast as one of the journalistic heroes of the disaster. The fact that Roger Ailes has won both Obie awards and Emmys does not come up a lot, nor does the fact that he donated a significant chunk of money to upgrade the student newsroom at Ohio University, his alma mater.

Instead, Mr. Ailes and Brian Lewis, his longtime head of public relations, act as if every organization that covers them is a potential threat and, in the process, have probably made it far more likely. And as the cable news race has tightened, because CNN has gained ground during a big election year, Fox News has become more prone to lashing out. Fun is fun, but it is getting uglier by the day out there.

The notion of “Fox News” and “journalism accomplishments” appearing in the same sentence strikes me as inherently odd, in part because I’m hard pressed to remember the last time the news network broke a story of consequence.

Nevertheless, while I find Carr’s point compelling, I also find the whole dynamic confusing. Fox News wants to be taken seriously as a professional, journalistic outlet. So, when a reporter at another outlet starts taking a look at the network, Fox News freaks out, starts making threats, and panics at the notion of being treated unfairly, further undercutting its reputation.

But if Fox News has an inferiority complex, why not — and I’m just throwing this out there — start trying journalism for a change? Perhaps, instead of simply being an extension of the Republican National Committee, Fox News could use its resources to become a cable news channel?

But, no, it wants to stick with the ridicule style that’s brought them ratings success and it wants to punish journalists who notice.

Mr. Lewis said that members of his staff were not in the business of altering photos, that they had no control over stories that appeared on “Fox and Friends” or other shows, and he pointed out that it makes their job harder when they go after reporters. He called my suggestion that there was something anti-Semitic about the depiction of Mr. Steinberg “vile and untrue.” Mr. Lewis denied that his staff had threatened one of my colleagues or planted private information about him on blogs.

That comes as a surprise to reporters I talked to who say they have received e-mail messages from Fox News public relations staff that contained doctored photos, anonymous quotes and nasty items about competitors. And two former Fox employees said that they had participated in precisely those kinds of activities but had signed confidentiality agreements and could not say so on the record.

What a sad, strange place.

I can never understand why anyone would watch this channel if they were looking for news. If you are looking for hot chicks, that is a different story. I am always shocked if I go in to a business and it is up on one of their TVs.

  • “We’re talking about what is ostensibly a news network, not an organized crime family.” – CB

    What we’re actually talking about here is an organized crime family pretending to be a “news” network. What continues to astonish me is how easily they continue to get away with it.

    Could it be that the owner(s) of Fox News control most of the other media already, overtly or covertly, so there’s really no one left to protest effectively? Gee, I wonder.

  • Reason and intelligence are slowly prevailing in our country.

    Take Olbermann v O’Reilly trend lines, for instance. Slowly but surely, we are winning.

  • P.S. look at the second (long-term) graph in the link above. Also note the 25-54 demographic is a virtual tie.

  • Well Patrick – I have the supreme joy of having to put up with Faux News on the tv at my local gym – not so much shocking but quite sickening when I’m trying to jog!

    They are a joke of a “news” station and anyone who depends on this station for their news is living in whackoland. Unfortunately, at times I think the entire country is living in whackoland….

  • Fox has to be defensive when one starts to snoop around because, if one looks too hard, one will discover Fox isn’t a news channel — it’s a rightwing propaganda outfit that masks itself as a legit news outlet.

    It’s like the guy who goes around telling everyone he’s the captain of the football team, and even has a uniform to prove it, but won’t let anyone come to his games, lest they discover he’s really just the waterboy.

    Same mindset, but the stakes — and, most importantly, the profits — are much, much larger.

  • Right-wingers perceive themselves as always under attack. When you gather a bunch of them into an echo chamber, the amplification of paranoia is inevitable.

  • Never mind, I read the article. He’s not pulling his punches on the doctored photos.

  • The problem is that people DO watch Fox “News,” some of them exclusively: it appeals to what can only be their inner fascist beast to sup on literally distorted images and info, fabrications, suppositions, and nasty, threatening “wishful thinking” — that appalling woman’s remark about doing away with both Osama and Obama, for example and all the more horrifying because her off the cuff remark was so casual, so easy in the Fox world. Fox deliberately lowers the bar on what is acceptable discours and, degrades the national conversation; it erases principle and issue and substitutes power and force. If other networks created better, more reliable reports — yes, they can! — Fox would wither on the commercial vine. Instead we get phony horse races and contrived “debates” or assumptions over who’s calling out who’s integrity, even if they aren’t. Thank heavens for independent and fact-based blogs, and hold them dear.

  • So after Nixon’s demise, the Republicans started to buy up the media outlets & mimic Hearst-style tactics. Like a frog in a gradually heated frying pan, people used to journalists like Walter Cronkite didn’t notice.
    So now the politcal truth is outspent $1,000,000 to $0.01 on Republican political propaganda, while they can also foster an atmosphere of fear & dread.
    What to do? These avenues are not going to die, look at AM radio situation. They may wither somewhat, but their influence will still be strong.

    How can you compete against the major corporations?

  • The Fox Noise Machine is simply GOP-TV. They’re not interested in reporting on actual news, but they expect to be treated like a respectable news organization, much like the GOP has no intention of governing this nation to benefit its people but still expect the respect one would associate a king to get from a peasant.

    Fox Noise is the girl running for prom queen who sees nothing wrong with throwing acid on all the other nominees, then calls ’em crybabies for shouting in pain.

    Fox Noise consists of thugs who cater to a thuggish audience, people who want to feel better about the hate in their heart, to know that their hate is not only normal, but appreciated by others who hate the same people in the same way.

    Fox Noise is the best example of what can go wrong by the media being too chummy with the politicians they’re supposed to cover, by being the WORST example of what can go wrong by the media being too chummy with the politicians they’re supposed to cover.

    If Fox Noise the network were a single person, he’d be a sociopath, attacking real or perceived enemies with a venom one would normally associate with soccer riots or “fast zombie” movies to maintain dominance, and then standing over and pissing on that now-neutralized potential threat.

    Anyone at Fox Noise who believes in honesty (and still works there) probably would agree with that assessment. They just wouldn’t see why any of that is so bad.

    And that’s why America has become a shadow of its former glory. A glory we can never regain, in full, until Fox Noise is neutralized. I’d settle for Fox Noise being “neutral” but Fox Noise thinks that means being “neutered.” It seems hopeless, and yet I hope. The average age of Fox Noise viewers keeps increasing – their audience is aging and young ‘uns aren’t comign around to pick up the slack. Despite out all-volunteer army, the Bush Administration’s inept handling of the wars we’re fighting makes the generations behind me more politically aware than mine was. Sure, there’s still plenty of people younger than I blissfully ignorant of life beyond their school or mall. And sadly, it takes one of their more idealistic friends to enlist in the military and come home in a wheelchair or a body bag to realize how the folly of this nation affects the world and how there might not be too much left to fight for after this Administration is done raping and pillaging the countryside. But slowly but surely, the lies can not stand. Communism in Russia fell, and they didn’t even have the internets to speedn things along. One can continue to hope. Actually, one must continue to hope.

    Please remember, I’m not a real progressive and I don’t know what I’m talking about.

  • Believing two contradictory things because they both help your cause, if you are an empiricist, would be hypocritical. For a Machiavellian, it would be hypocritical not to. Who’s to say who’s right, and who’s way of thinking is invalid? That’s not our jobs.

  • Re 12:

    Which is why I’ve said it before. The only way to bring any accountability into journalism is to not support (i.e. watch) outlets who deliver nothing but propaganda. This includes Faux and pretty much every other cable outfit.

    They are all owned by large media corporations. The only thing they understand is revenue. By not supporting them, you affect that because you don’t buy products from their adverstisers.

  • I get it Matthew. And just like you, I use what few opportunities I eke out to make that point, while waiting for the rest of the world to wise up or die off.

    But remember, I’m not a real progressive and I don’t know what I’m talking about.

  • Fox News = The Cult of Scientology. If you criticize them, they will destroy you.

  • Roger Ailes made Nixon. All the tactics Nixon used on his enemies are exactly what Faux News uses now as they hunker in the bunker, and it all comes from Ailes. Ailes and Rove are probably the two most evil men in the country right behind Cheney and Rumsfeld. How did such a fascist pack ever get so organized and so powerful?

  • BuzzMom #11, I like where you are going with this. Does Obama have a plan to strengthen the FCC and bust the ‘news’ mogul’s monopoly?

  • Mathew has it right. Fox News happens to be the most extreme and ridiculous of the lot, but at times during the last eight years, it has seemed as if CNN and MSNBC were looking at Fox as some sort of role model. Fox took their lead from Rush Limbaugh, and soon had an audience of self righteous fanatics who judge the world by their “values” yet don’t mind getting their news from a drug addict.

    Fox has nothing to do with news. They are peddling self image to the American People and an alarming number of us seem to be lapping it right up. Even looking at the supposed antithesis of Fox News, one would say it’s Olberman; but one night I asked myself, would Walter Cronkite sternly lecture the president or a candidate for president on his news show? That’s what’s gone, news presented without the focus on making sure you get the drift, and like what you see.

  • For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

    For every “journalistic accomplishment,” there is a “Fox News segment.”

    Sorry for saying the same thing twice….

  • I am always shocked if I go in to a business and it is up on one of their TVs.

    Me too. I’ve actually taken my business elsewhere. “Clearly, you people are idiots and you’re not going to do this well.”

  • 15 and 19: Re:

    I know – but I think it bears repeating – over, and over. You, CK, and I need to keep mentioning it until it sticks in people’s minds.

    Often many (myself included) criticize these corporations over such things with the belief that there is no action one can take that will have positive effect.

    Media Matters is great at documenting all these events, but my problem with them is that their efforts are always after-the-fact. They are catalog-ing (sic) events that have already happened, and the damage has been done – viewers are left with a distorted picture of reality. To really be effective, you have to be able to challenge such false statements either in real time (by supporting candidates who’ll go on these programs and actually do that) …

    … or get them ahead of time by getting enough people to not support their products (i.e. cable shows) at all.

    That’s why I don’t subscribe to cable. I refuse to pay for something I don’t want or has any value to me.

    It’s the same thing with businesses. Wanna really affect political change? Go to opensecrets.org and search on all the businesses one deals with (groceries, utilities, etc. etc.) and see who contributes to whom and how much. You can make a difference by not supporting businesses who contribute to opponents of what you believe in – and that transends political views.

    I admit that’s something hard to do, and it’s almost impossible to do at once. But gradually, over time, one can make a difference, if one really has the will to.

  • Matthew @22 said:
    That’s why I don’t subscribe to cable. I refuse to pay for something I don’t want or has any value to me
    Exactly! Until people are ready to give up their television addiction en masse, the cable outlets will continue think they’re doing OK.

  • We’re talking about what is ostensibly a news network, not an organized crime family.

    No, we’re talking about the propaganda arm of Bushco, which is indeed an organized crime family.

    Roger Ailes is the Julius Streicher of the 21st Century.

  • I am always shocked if I go in to a business and it is up on one of their TVs.

    Last year, when I was going to the VA Hospital frequently for a checkup of a condition, I noticed that Fox was on all the time. I complained about it and the employee looked at me and asked “Do you realize who’s in charge here?”

  • When I go to my VA medical appointments in Richmond the TVs are all turned to CNN. They keep repeating the same non news over and over and over. I have to bring my MP3 player now to have some sanity.

  • Sorry but writing in the NYT that another media outlet is biased pretty much sends the irony meter off the red zone.

  • But now that Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch is running fund raisers in London for Barak Obama surely the channel will be the darling of America’s liberals. After all not a word must be said against the hypocritical,dishonest closet fundie the Democrats have sadlled themselves with.

    He’ll move further to the right once Murdoch starts pulling his strings though.

  • When will Fox News have a story on the Chinese citizenship of its overlord, Rupert Murdoch? Did Murdoch take an oath to the Chinese communist party? Seems like taking an oath would be required to become a Chinese citizen. How can Fox News purport to be the authority on American patriotism while at the same time Mr. Murdoch takes marching orders from China’s communist authorities? What would the redneck viewers of Fox News think about Mr. Murdoch pledging an oath to China’s communist party (if true)? If the table is turned on Fox News in the same vein that they attack their opponents (patriotism, jingoism, veiled racism), then Fox News will be exposed as anti-American hypocrites.

  • FoxNews is to professional journalism what the WWF is to professional sports, a joke perpetrated upon the profession by a bunch of half-wit clowns.

  • What does it say about the quality of a news service if for at least two years running, a national survey (Univ. of Maryland) shows that the more you get your news from that particular service, the less you know and the more false items you believe? Remember that when the Iraq fiasco began, UMd ran surveys that showed that people who watched Faux were more likely to believe that the 9/11 highjackers were Iraqis, that WMD had been found in Iraq, and that Saddam had connections with the highjackers. People who got their information from NPR were the most likely to be correctly informed. At one point one of Limpbaugh’s callers said, “Well, they don’t know who won NASCAR.”

  • The issue here is propaganda and its effectiveness. Fox News is not a mutually exclusive event but rather operates in a vacuum of events that will have an impact on the average citizen. How these events are presented is the crux of the situation. Theories are nice but reality is what we all experience. And since the modern comfort state allows for a considerable lag time between theory and reality the purveyors of propaganda have a larger window in which to operate. The internet and its ability to allow for rapid critical analysis of information is a direct threat to this situation. We should all be watching for any attacks on the basic principle of net neutrality.
    The ascendency of the Reagan Reaction has peaked with oil, and the far side of the Bell Curve might not be so gentle a slope.

  • I still get a laugh from this:
    F = 6th letter of the alphabet
    O = 15th letter, 1+5=6
    X =24th letter, 2=4=6
    therefore FOX = 666
    Satan’s network, Fair and Balanced.

  • I like FOX. What we need is a left-wing FOX, to balance things out–a sort of 24/7 Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow network, with Keith and Rachel being the moderate voices. We’ll have hot gals in hot green pants selling Al Gore light bulbs, “Discussion” shows with dorky-looking inarticulate men purporting to give the “Conservative” viewpoint and getting smacked down by brilliant left-wing cuties, and we could have George W. Bush on as a special guest just every day (wide shot showing camera crew laughing as he mispronounces stuff).

  • I just want to correct something in my earlier post: to my knowledge, Rupert Murdoch has not become a Chinese citizen; it was a joke put to him by a Chinese official asking if he would become one. He is an American citizen and had to renounce his Australia citizenship to do so.

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